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Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1967-07-04

Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1967-07-04, page 01

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PBONICLE
"litQ Serving Columbus, "Centt^r" alja Southwestern Wo~VPR
Vol. 45, No. 27
THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1967 -28 SIVAN, 5727
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"UNITED NATIONS, (WUP)—Durfaig Ms press con¬ ference here on the eve of his departure &rom the United States, USSR Premier Kosygin was confronted with a question on USSR anti-Semitism. In his reply, he denied that anti-Semitism has a place in the Soviet UMon. In proof of Ms statement, Kosygfai referred to Jews in Russia holdfaig Mgh government positions and cited the &ict that one of his Deputy Premier's is a Jew. He had reference to Vet\jamin Emanulio- vich DymsMtz, aged 56, who is an outstandhig econo¬ mic planner. ^
NEW YORK, (WUP)—The Zionist faiformation Ser¬ vice has reported from Israel ttiat the Torah reading of the week was read on Mount Sinai during the re¬ cent Shevuot holiday, following the Israeli conquest of the Pennisula, for the first time since Matan Torah, the giving of the Law, by Moses,
JERUSALEM, (JTA) ~ Thousands pf Jews poured into Old Ji^rusalem for the first time in 19 years wMle an equal number of Old City Arab residents crossed fanto tlie new city for the first time after Israeli workmen completed the task of eliminating most physical barriers lietween'the two sectiohi^. Under Government edict, all parts of the retmlted city were made accessible to all residents.
NEW YORK, (JTA) —Former Vice-President Rich¬ ard Nixon, speaking at an informal luncheon tendered Mm by the Zionist Organis;ation of America said that Israel should not and cannot' withdraw trom the occupied territory untU permanent peace be acMeved. TMs territory must serve as a bargaining point in its negotiations with the Arabs^ he said. '
FALLSBURG, N.Y., (JTA) — The annual convention of the RabbiMcai CouncU of America adopted tMs week a resolution lendorsfaig "wholeheartedly" the decision of:tbe ,IsraQli Gov(^i|iiwiit)tovgu sancti^ and,free accessVtovitsfoly^piacesi^ 600 Orthodoii: rabbi's also'iu^ed Vrab61s{a^ alike to take advantage of tlw access "aiid t^^^^^^ on a pilgrimage to the Holy Laiid;" ,v
WASHINGTON, (JTA) — TheU.S.S. Liberiyreceived an order to withdraw flrom the war zone tragically late because thesMp was not under Sixth Fleet command owing to its faiitelligence agency control, high-ranking {Naval sources said in commenting on the findings of an inquiry by a liavy court.
(Continued on Page 13)
Israel Emergency Fund Campaign Mobilises For A Final Effort
^
As the Israel Emergency Fund Campaign of the UM¬ ted Jewish Fund and CouncU nears completion, a ffaial ef¬ fort is befaig made to reach every Jewish family in the community, so that all wUI be represented in the massive undertaking wMch has been going on.
At the same time, contri- Initors were asked to speed up the flow of cash even more axiA hot to wait to be liUledi sfaice bUlfaig delays are inevitable duringthe present,period of intensiye campai^ activity. It was also statied by the Campaign Committee that an even fast¬ er flow of payments is re- qtiired, to meet emergency needs in Israel because of the economic problems there causedbythe war. '
AS THE people of Israel were prepiaredi and did ac¬ cept the horrors of war, all we are called upon to do is to give money :tb; relieve ;itliem^^t!l^!*inrdens!!Ot;^p-»^ cial .yelfare problems aris¬ ing from 19 years ..of pur¬ suing an open icIoOripdUcy for every Jewish Jmifiigrant seeking a haven aiid,an op¬ portunity to rebuild his shat¬ tered life.
encouraging. As the Cam¬ paign draws to a dose, here are a few of the many "hap- penhigs" the staff and vo¬ lunteer workers wUl recall, some with tears, some with laughter, all with nostalgia, and grateful appreciation for tlie manifest evidence of how our community rose to the occasion;
' ITEM: How organizations changed or cancelled meet¬ ings, even annual meetfaigs, such as the Jewish Center and the Jewish Family Ser¬
vice, in order not to conflict withEmergency Fund ef¬ forts. '
ITEM: How hundreds of men, women and chUdren literally gave up going to meetings or social affairs, because they were workfaig on the Campaign.
ITEM: How aU local con¬ gregations permitted ap¬ peals during their Temple and Synagogue Shevuoth Ser¬ vices, and at Qonfbrmation Exercises, anuiynrecedented event.
Jerusalem Reunitecl
IMTED NATIONS, N.Y., (JTA) ~ The maneuverfaig fai the special session of tiie (general Assembly for a formula to settie the postwar problems in the MiddleEast was com¬ plicated by reaction to Israel's merger of Old Jerusalem iiito ite capital.
The Johnson Adminlstratiim reacted sharply to news of a riewi IwaelLlaw^ wMchmade; ppssj^Ue^^ .'tratiye; ;8teps!,ftnvmMcattqn J^ 'of / old'"and'new^'Jeiriis^^
STATUS OF WOMEN IS QUESTIONED
Leaders of major Jewish women's 9i|[^aMza^oi|is sign petition' sponsored by the National ,C(^cU oit Jewish {W0m^n urgfaig refaiterpretation 'at: status of women tOnder Jewish law. The slgnfaig ji^remany, held at the NCJW Executive Committee meetfaig i iii New York, is part of the NCJW effort to get iyide- spre^d effort for the petition, wMch was dravyn up by the <liit^nMionaI CouncU of Jewish ]V,q[^9n. Si)ipwn at the c^reinony are: (1. to r.) Mrs. EleahbrSchWiurtz of the Natiohal Federation of Temple| Sisiterboijds; Mrs. H. Herbert Rossman of the National, \(irp^en's League I o^ tfie United Synagogues of America;: )VI^j^. SolomoniGelfand of Hadassah and Mrs. RoseiKau^an of Pionepr I Women. Observing the sigiiing are: (1.!» r.) Mrs. Joseph Willen, NCJW Honorary ViiciBrPresident; Mrs. Frank Cohen, Chairman of the NCJIJVConwifiit^e on {Women Under Jewish Law; Mi;s., Leonard H. Wefaier,! NGJW National President an^ilylirs. Ronald Brown, iPresident of the faiternational CJijMncil of Jew¬ ish women. H
Vignettes
The ;Ainericyn,|Jewish community has ifeliti^i^ded magnificently Ito |tiu; clial- lenge to meet jaral|mtj!li the example of ^' the ifsiraelis. In Columbus, tiurough the UMted Jewish Fund and CouncU, the results of the Emergency Fund Campaign have been correspondingly
Peace Chances Better Today
JERUSAlJm|(JTA)~ Premier LeiilEkUtol taldan impromptu cpnf^iice with foreign jounjalj^ that as long as IsraePs! neighbors continued td m^e idans for Israel's destruction,, "we are- not gpfaig to evaciiate any of the teitrit^ories under our control necessary for our security."
He added tM if the Arab rulers would agir^ to negot¬ iate with i9|rgei; "aU pro¬ blems could be solved' and I^ re ite r ate d an earlier Statement that "chances for peace are bettpr toc|ay than at any tfaiiq ^jthepast 20 years."i:;/i ! ;i ¦
TWO .TSRMIi'l prtsoners of wair captifcepi by Iraq were returned tnr.Jfqijdan to Israel in exchange for 428 Jordan¬ ian^ prisoners |held by Israel. The Israelis were pUots shot downi'jclver Iraq and transferied ^- Jordan last week.
DipIomatsiiatithsUiJdted Na¬ tions brought heevy^essure to bear on Isirael.over: the Jerusalem merger activities whUe debate continued ona variety of draft resolutions before the emergency ses¬ sion,
THE HEART of aU of the drafts involved Israeli with¬ drawal trom captured ter¬ ritory of Egypt, !^ia and Jordan. I^'he draft introduced by the Soviets, at whose de¬ mand the emergency ses sion was convened, demanded Is¬ rael's unconditional with¬ drawal as the "agressor" and payment by Israel to the Arab states for war losses.
The UMted States draft linked withdrawal to recog- Mtion of Israel by the Arab states, arrangements of peaceful transit of interna- ticmal waterways and ar¬ rangements to solve the en¬ larged Arab ref ugeeprob- lem. Neither draft had any chance of adoption l^r the required two thirds ma¬ jority.
YUGOSLAVIA and faidia, backed by 12 other "non- aligned" member states, urged immediate action on another resolution confined to a demand for uncondi¬ tional Israeli withdrawal, wMch Foreign Minister Abba Eban of Israel. caUed "a prescription for hbstUlty."
AT A PRESS conference, Eban accused the Soviet Un¬ ion of having started "inten¬ sive, shipments'' qf arms to Egypt and Syria, includbig substantial numbers of figh¬ ter planes, tanks and GU¬ lery. He also .touched, bn the status of Jeru&alem, declar¬ ing that the "administrative legislation" voted by the Knesset "contained no new political state^iit" and was concerned "exijlusively with
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iiliiecessity" of re¬ pairing ravages and disloca- tionsi airising partly "trom the hostUities which Jordan faifliiiteduponit."
He said the world had not paid sufficient attention to the fact that the same leg¬ islation provided forprotec- tion of all holy places and for heavy penalities for vio-< (Continued on Page 13)
Gois^fm
Israelis
LOS ANGELES, (WUP) ~ "Israel should not give up one inch of the territory she was forced to take firom the Arab nations."
Thus declared Barry Goldwater ih;Ms'^yndic9ted column appearing |n the Los Angeles Times recently..
"I SAY forced.tq talce," the foirmer Senator firom Arizona and Presidential candidate note4 j f'because it seems ciystal i^Iear that the Arabs were the aggres¬ sors, that backed by the So- vied UMon they forced war on Isirael and that every action Israel took in turn was an act of seifrdefense."
Goldw^f was empjiatic in stating tliat"Isiraei«tbuld keep the territoiy to pro¬ tect her. borders and her people against ftiture ag¬ gression^ from ith^j/^rab na¬ tions. It is tragically ob¬ vious," be conciu^d, '^tiiat mere words cannot keep peace in the Middle East, tiiat tiie UN is to^aUy dead in such a role and that only an assured and.protected position for Israel ban dfimp flames fai the Middle Ea^t."
ITEM: How the Bonds for Israel Office gave up plans for its own Rally, so that a Mass Community-wide Rally could be held fai behalf of the Emergency Fund.'
ITEM: How local organi¬ zations emptied their trea¬ suries, in many instances givfaig reserve funds wMch had been painstakingly ac¬ cumulated over many years. '.
ITEM: How Karen Ami? (Religious School) Fundsy were turned over completely . to the Emergency Fund by. the ChUdren.
Here, too, a few personal vignettes culled from hun¬ dreds of SimUar faicidents wMch wUl be told and retold in tlie years ahead;
' (Continued on Page 13)
Aiiii^ation f
The Johnsbn AdmlMstraUoill; I twice warned Isirael againstj.^^^^^^^ annexation of Old Jerusalem;;?^5; without fuU coisultfitionwitii If:: Christian and Moslem. re--^Q ligious leadeirs and athers.||j j In a special statement, is- ; |,' ' sued shortly before King '|| Hussein of Jordan was w^I-.^i;'\ .'^ comed to the WMte House,;:;! President Johnson urged. ' such consultation because 'of'^.^ Jerusalem's spec 1 al reli- , i gious significance toChristr \ ians and Moslems and j;ews^ The timing oftiie statement./ was tielieved alined at reag-^,;.. surfaig King Hussein tbM^'* the United States did not;7 accept ftdl Israeli sover- :. eign^f over parte of Jeru- ' salem and its environs held liy Jordan before it was knocked out of the third Arab-Israel war on June 6. WHILE the Kfaig and tiie I'resident were meeting. State Department press spokesman Robert McClos¬ key caUed the Israeli "an¬ nexation" of Old Jerusalem unacceptable and criticized "hasty admfaiistraUve ac¬ tion" by Israel. Later the ,^ State Department disclbsed!^^!:: that Israel had been faifonn- .f: ed directly about UMtedSta«»,^' tes opposition. 'S.
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Shukairy Escapes/; iu
Dressed As IFi&huiiri *: Jerusalem; (WUP) ~ i^:
The nbtorious AhmedShH-:^;:: kaiiy, who, as Commaiidelr'-^l^v fai-chief, of the "Palestiiie li^; Liberation Airatv,'',ha|di;aiST 4;' pired to become tSi? first 4 ! president of a''liberatedf' Israel foUowing a never- doubted UAR-Syrian vic¬ toiy" last month, escaped the Old city (tf Jerusalem a miserable creature gairjiied ^ in a woman's clpth^r
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¦«-w»n.»>A-Uiitv**-**-*"'"*w=t^V'^*t ikv •-.f-'.a»l*(-
i U AMf kit V.
¦allnlilMnIi '\„ '
ty.Vf'.
If
Iv
|l!l
"UNITED NATIONS, (WUP)—Durfaig Ms press con¬ ference here on the eve of his departure &rom the United States, USSR Premier Kosygin was confronted with a question on USSR anti-Semitism. In his reply, he denied that anti-Semitism has a place in the Soviet UMon. In proof of Ms statement, Kosygfai referred to Jews in Russia holdfaig Mgh government positions and cited the &ict that one of his Deputy Premier's is a Jew. He had reference to Vet\jamin Emanulio- vich DymsMtz, aged 56, who is an outstandhig econo¬ mic planner. ^
NEW YORK, (WUP)—The Zionist faiformation Ser¬ vice has reported from Israel ttiat the Torah reading of the week was read on Mount Sinai during the re¬ cent Shevuot holiday, following the Israeli conquest of the Pennisula, for the first time since Matan Torah, the giving of the Law, by Moses,
JERUSALEM, (JTA) ~ Thousands pf Jews poured into Old Ji^rusalem for the first time in 19 years wMle an equal number of Old City Arab residents crossed fanto tlie new city for the first time after Israeli workmen completed the task of eliminating most physical barriers lietween'the two sectiohi^. Under Government edict, all parts of the retmlted city were made accessible to all residents.
NEW YORK, (JTA) —Former Vice-President Rich¬ ard Nixon, speaking at an informal luncheon tendered Mm by the Zionist Organis;ation of America said that Israel should not and cannot' withdraw trom the occupied territory untU permanent peace be acMeved. TMs territory must serve as a bargaining point in its negotiations with the Arabs^ he said. '
FALLSBURG, N.Y., (JTA) — The annual convention of the RabbiMcai CouncU of America adopted tMs week a resolution lendorsfaig "wholeheartedly" the decision of:tbe ,IsraQli Gov(^i|iiwiit)tovgu sancti^ and,free accessVtovitsfoly^piacesi^ 600 Orthodoii: rabbi's also'iu^ed Vrab61s{a^ alike to take advantage of tlw access "aiid t^^^^^^ on a pilgrimage to the Holy Laiid;" ,v
WASHINGTON, (JTA) — TheU.S.S. Liberiyreceived an order to withdraw flrom the war zone tragically late because thesMp was not under Sixth Fleet command owing to its faiitelligence agency control, high-ranking {Naval sources said in commenting on the findings of an inquiry by a liavy court.
(Continued on Page 13)
Israel Emergency Fund Campaign Mobilises For A Final Effort
^
As the Israel Emergency Fund Campaign of the UM¬ ted Jewish Fund and CouncU nears completion, a ffaial ef¬ fort is befaig made to reach every Jewish family in the community, so that all wUI be represented in the massive undertaking wMch has been going on.
At the same time, contri- Initors were asked to speed up the flow of cash even more axiA hot to wait to be liUledi sfaice bUlfaig delays are inevitable duringthe present,period of intensiye campai^ activity. It was also statied by the Campaign Committee that an even fast¬ er flow of payments is re- qtiired, to meet emergency needs in Israel because of the economic problems there causedbythe war. '
AS THE people of Israel were prepiaredi and did ac¬ cept the horrors of war, all we are called upon to do is to give money :tb; relieve ;itliem^^t!l^!*inrdens!!Ot;^p-»^ cial .yelfare problems aris¬ ing from 19 years ..of pur¬ suing an open icIoOripdUcy for every Jewish Jmifiigrant seeking a haven aiid,an op¬ portunity to rebuild his shat¬ tered life.
encouraging. As the Cam¬ paign draws to a dose, here are a few of the many "hap- penhigs" the staff and vo¬ lunteer workers wUl recall, some with tears, some with laughter, all with nostalgia, and grateful appreciation for tlie manifest evidence of how our community rose to the occasion;
' ITEM: How organizations changed or cancelled meet¬ ings, even annual meetfaigs, such as the Jewish Center and the Jewish Family Ser¬
vice, in order not to conflict withEmergency Fund ef¬ forts. '
ITEM: How hundreds of men, women and chUdren literally gave up going to meetings or social affairs, because they were workfaig on the Campaign.
ITEM: How aU local con¬ gregations permitted ap¬ peals during their Temple and Synagogue Shevuoth Ser¬ vices, and at Qonfbrmation Exercises, anuiynrecedented event.
Jerusalem Reunitecl
IMTED NATIONS, N.Y., (JTA) ~ The maneuverfaig fai the special session of tiie (general Assembly for a formula to settie the postwar problems in the MiddleEast was com¬ plicated by reaction to Israel's merger of Old Jerusalem iiito ite capital.
The Johnson Adminlstratiim reacted sharply to news of a riewi IwaelLlaw^ wMchmade; ppssj^Ue^^ .'tratiye; ;8teps!,ftnvmMcattqn J^ 'of / old'"and'new^'Jeiriis^^
STATUS OF WOMEN IS QUESTIONED
Leaders of major Jewish women's 9i|[^aMza^oi|is sign petition' sponsored by the National ,C(^cU oit Jewish {W0m^n urgfaig refaiterpretation 'at: status of women tOnder Jewish law. The slgnfaig ji^remany, held at the NCJW Executive Committee meetfaig i iii New York, is part of the NCJW effort to get iyide- spre^d effort for the petition, wMch was dravyn up by the .:,